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CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW
5.1 A Short History Of Refrigerant-Cycle Air Conditioners
Remarkably, one of our founding fathers, Ben Franklin, had a hand in the
underlying science of air conditioning. In 1758, Ben Franklin and a colleague in
England, chemist John Hadley, conducted an experiment on the cooling properties of
evaporation. By using a bellows to evaporate highly volatile liquids like alcohol and
ether, they were able to drop the temperature to 7°F, building up a thick layer of ice on
their mercury thermometer—while the ambient temperature was 64°F (Energy
Solution, 2012)
In 1820, another of history‘s greatest scientists, the British inventor Michael
Faraday, showed that by mechanically compressing ammonia to liquefy (condense) it
and then allowing the ammonia to expand and evaporate, he could cool air. And in
1842, a Florida physician, John Gorrie, wanting to keep patients cool, was able to use
this principal to make ice in an Apalachicola hospital. Gorrie patented his system in
1851 and hoped to commercialize it to cool buildings, but his financial backer died
and with it, Gorrie‘s path to success. Air conditioning would not reappear for 50 years
(Energy Solution, 2012).
In 1902, Willis Carrier of Syracuse, New York perfected a system for
dehumidifying a commercial printing plant. The goal was to stabilize the paper, but
the invention also kept the plant‘s temperature more comfortable and the workers
more productive. He formed The Carrier Air Conditioning Company of America to
produce these systems, eventually extending beyond commercial buildings to homes.
With 32,000 employees in 170 countries, Carrier Corporation(now a subsidiary of
United Technologies Corporation) is today the world leader in high-technology
heating, air conditioning, and refrigeration systems (Energy Solution, 2012).